Difference between revisions of "Category:Slovene Impressionists and their Time"

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{{Image|Slovene Impressionsts and Their Time poster 2013 Petit Palais Paris.jpg}}
 
{{Image|Slovene Impressionsts and Their Time poster 2013 Petit Palais Paris.jpg}}
  
The four Slovene impressionist painters – [[Ivan Grohar]], [[Rihard Jakopič]], [[Matija Jama]], and [[Matej Sternen]] connected in Munich: the impact of the Munich academy, the Secession movement and a well-known private painting school by the Slovene [[Anton Ažbe]] were formative for their creation.  
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The four Slovene impressionist painters – [[Ivan Grohar]], [[Rihard Jakopič]], [[Matija Jama]], and [[Matej Sternen]] connected in Munich in the late 1890s: the impact of the Munich academy, the Secession movement and a well-known private painting school by the Slovene [[Anton Ažbe]] were formative for their creation.  
  
 
The nearly one-hundred-year-old vivid debate regarding modernism in Slovene fine arts has brought much mythologisation as well as many controversies about the sources and repercussions of its representatives. The interpretation of impressionism or “naturlyricism”, postimpressionism or symbolism goes hand in hand with the analysis of a social and cultural-political context. Namely, that this group of artists which communicated across many art disciplines had a significant impact on the development of Slovene art as well as the establishment of the local art scene and its institutions (Jakopič set up the first exhibition space in 1909).
 
The nearly one-hundred-year-old vivid debate regarding modernism in Slovene fine arts has brought much mythologisation as well as many controversies about the sources and repercussions of its representatives. The interpretation of impressionism or “naturlyricism”, postimpressionism or symbolism goes hand in hand with the analysis of a social and cultural-political context. Namely, that this group of artists which communicated across many art disciplines had a significant impact on the development of Slovene art as well as the establishment of the local art scene and its institutions (Jakopič set up the first exhibition space in 1909).

Revision as of 01:58, 1 December 2020

Slovene Impressionists and Their Time poster 2013 Petit Palais Paris.jpgThe poster of the exhibition Slovene Impressionists and Their Time at the Petit Palais in Paris, co-organised by the National Gallery of Slovenia, 2013.

The four Slovene impressionist painters – Ivan Grohar, Rihard Jakopič, Matija Jama, and Matej Sternen connected in Munich in the late 1890s: the impact of the Munich academy, the Secession movement and a well-known private painting school by the Slovene Anton Ažbe were formative for their creation.

The nearly one-hundred-year-old vivid debate regarding modernism in Slovene fine arts has brought much mythologisation as well as many controversies about the sources and repercussions of its representatives. The interpretation of impressionism or “naturlyricism”, postimpressionism or symbolism goes hand in hand with the analysis of a social and cultural-political context. Namely, that this group of artists which communicated across many art disciplines had a significant impact on the development of Slovene art as well as the establishment of the local art scene and its institutions (Jakopič set up the first exhibition space in 1909).

Iconic legacy

Let us mention just one example of such cross-impacts: Ivan Grohar’s Sower (1907) is linked to Giovanni Segantini’s painting and based on Avgust Berthold’s photo of the sower. It acquired the status of a national icon quite soon and now remains imprinted in the collective visual memory also as the sower of stars on the 5-cent euro coin. In 1987 the painters’ collective Irwin of the Neue Slowenische Kunst used the sower as the dominant motif in the project Slovenske Atene (Slovenian Athens) that also resulted in the international exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in Ljubljana in 1991.

Slovene Impressionists in international arena

The first international presentation of the four impressionists (at the time members of the "Sava" group) took place in 1904 at the art salon Miethke in Vienna, the following one in Trieste in 1909. The Sava group exhibited also in Paris – during the peace treaty in 1919 in the scope of the Yugoslav art exhibition.

The National Gallery of Slovenia featured the exhibition Slovene Impressionists and their Time 1890–1920 in 2008 on the occasion of the Slovenian Presidency of the European Union and the 90th anniversary of the National Gallery of Slovenia. In 2009 the exhibition Polish Painting circa 1900, Impressionism and Symbolism was prepared in cooperation with the Polish National Museum. For the Paris exhibition a new selection of works was done by the curators Sylvain Lecombre, head curator of the Petit Palais, and Barbara Jaki, director of the National Gallery of Slovenia.


Below you can find a list of public and private collections, archives, and other articles that related to the Slovene Impressionists on the Culture.si portal.

Media in category "Slovene Impressionists and their Time"

The following 21 files are in this category, out of 21 total.